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Thursday, October 27, 2016

Terror in the Tropics!

Calling pirates, explorers, and spooky ghost hunters! Bish Denham, author of The Bowl and the Stone, is here to tell us a frightening tale from the Caribbean.

"Thanks for letting me hang out on your blog, Fairday! Today
we’re going to explore Annaberg which plays a small but important roll in my
story, The Bowl and the Stone: A Haunting Tale from the Virgin Islands." ~ Bish Denham

***

St. John, in what is now the U.S. Virgin Islands, was first
settled (colonized) by Denmark in 1717. St. Thomas had been settled in 1671.
The Dutch were the first to settle St. Croix in 1642.

By 1728, just ten years after being settled, there were 87 plantations
on the island. Annaberg, one of the largest plantations, was under cultivation
by 1731. During the 1800s it became one of St. John’s largest sugar producers.

This picture was taken some
time after 1933. The windmill was added between 1820-1830, prior to that a
horse mill was used. You can just see the curved wall of the horse mill at the
far left. All the buildings were built with the sweat and toil of slave labor.

In the 1950s, a
family lived in the windmill. It had a roof and a
wooden second floor built into it.

This is the factory
building where the cane juice was boiled down to make molasses, sugar, and rum.
Imagine the hillsides terraced and cultivated and being maintained by slaves. The
wall on the right is part of the horse mill.

Only one of the large
iron vats used for boiling the juice is left, as can be seen in the center of
this picture.

This is where the
fires were stoked under the iron vats. Imagine, in the heat
of a tropical summer, having to work the fires all day long.

One of the things
that brings a human face to the suffering, are these etchings of the walls of
the dungeon. A real person, imprisoned for some offence, perhaps took a rock
and scratched these drawings into the plaster. This one shows Annaberg as it
once looked. There were second
stories, made of wood. This one, harder to
see, is of a sailing ship.

In my novel, The Bowl and the Stone, Sam and her best friend
Nick, find a new etching which mysteriously disappears.

Here's excerpt from the book...

~

Nick and I study the drawings.
It’s strange and eerie in the room. There’s the lingering sense of the breathing and
heartbeats of slaves who had been locked away. The air is heavy with sorrow. We
talk in whispers as if we’re in a church or library. I’m afraid, as if I’m
about to disturb a sleeping monster.

Nick is studying other parts of
the wall when I notice a bunch of scratches near the floor, in the darkest
corner of the tiny room.

“Hey, Nick, come take a look at
this.”

He squats down next to me.

Etched into the wall is a
drawing.

“I’ve never seen this before,”
I say.

“What is it?”

“A lot of people lying on the
ground all lined up in rows.”

“Looky here.” Nick points.
Bending over one of the bodies is the figure of a person carrying a bowl.
“These drawings aren’t like the others. It’s not as detailed and the scratches
are fresh. The plaster is white where it’s been scraped away. In the old
drawings the lines are dark.”

The drawing is about a foot
long and three to four inches tall. The people are nothing more than stick
figures.

“What do you think it means?”

Check out the book on Amazon and enter the rafflecopter giveaway below!

About the Author

Bish Denham, whose mother’s side of
the family has been in the Caribbean for over one hundred years, was raised in
the U. S. Virgin Islands. She still has lots of family living there whom she
visits regularly.

She says, “Growing up in the islands was
like living inside a history book. Columbus named the islands, Sir Francis
Drake sailed through the area, and Alexander Hamilton was raised on St. Croix.
The ruins of hundreds of sugar plantations, built with the sweat and blood of
slave labor, litter the islands. Then there were the pirates who plied the
waters. It is within this atmosphere of wonder and mystery, that I grew up.
Life for me was magical, and through my writing I hope to pass on some of that
magic.”

The Bowl and the Stone: A Haunting Tale from the Virgin Islands, is her third book and second novel.
You can find Anansi and Company: Retold
Jamaican Tales and A Lizard’s Tail,
at Amazon.com.

Hi DMS and Bish .. as EC says you bring new aspects for us to learn about your islands ... and then the history of sugar - it must have been a cruel existence. Those dungeons - oh so so terrible to think of ... and then using one of the scratched wall drawings into a story line in your book ... cheers Hilary

Hilary- We are sure that the history in the post intrigued you, as you always have such interesting posts about interesting tidbits in history. So glad you were learning something new here today. :) ~Stephanie and Jess

Loved the inclusion of all those images - it made the whole story really come to life. And the tropics is where you'll be able to find a lot of creepy stories, especially as a lot of people there believe in ghosts as well!

Thank you for stopping by and commenting. We love to hear your thoughts! Fairday's Blog is no longer accepting awards. We appreciate all the nominations that we have received and are honored to have been mentioned! Happy Reading!